Mitochondrion and chloroplast have a double membrane. Its origin can be explained by the endosymbiont theory. A cell nucleus also has a double membrane. How does one explain that?

Mitochondrion and chloroplast have a double membrane. Its origin is explained by the endosymbiont theory. A nucleus has never ended up in another cell as a ‘foreign’ organism; the nuclear membrane was created to protect the DNA. Why is a single membrane not sufficient here? How and why did the second originate?

Asker: daniels, 52 years old

Answer

Best,

The double nuclear membrane is formed by the endoplasmic reticulum: these flattened membrane sacs lie around the nuclear material after nuclear division, merge into two continuous membranes, closed all around, in which nuclear pores are placed. The ribosomes on the ER continue to work (yet on the cytoplasmic side). The nuclear membrane, or rather the nuclear membranes with intermembrane solution in between, are part of the ER: an organelle in itself, with function as a normal ER, but additionally controlling entry and exit via nuclear pores.

Kind regards

Answered by

ir. Myriam Meyers

industrial microbiology and biochemistry

Mitochondrion and chloroplast have a double membrane.  Its origin can be explained by the endosymbiont theory.  A cell nucleus also has a double membrane.  How does one explain that?

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